• onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    5 hours ago

    If it has secure boot, is opensource, and not dependent on having a single entity approve of self compiled binaries OE blobs (like UEFI forcing Microsoft’s approval of bootloaders), then heck yeah, this might be great! Otherwise, if it’s just some proprietary, closed source alternative to the existing crap, my enthusiasm is limited.

    • Alphane MoonOPM
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      2 hours ago

      The machine translated version of the Fast Technology/mydrivers article does not mention any of this.

  • Lembot_0004@discuss.onlineBanned
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    1 day ago

    We need to return to BIOS. It was as primitive as it should be. In some regards even more clever than needed. Clever things were done by OS anyway. EFI just added problems while not resolving any issues.

      • Lembot_0004@discuss.onlineBanned
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        5 hours ago

        Does BIOS have secure boot?

        No. And that is a good thing.

        Or can secure boot be built upon anything?

        Yes, the kernel loader can do whatever check you want.

          • Lembot_0004@discuss.onlineBanned
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            4 hours ago

            It is already late if your boot sector is writable by anyone who wants to. Moreover, the boot sector isn’t writable if you get access just to the FS.

            • the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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              4 hours ago

              If I managed to get root, either by compromising account credentials or using some sort of escalation exploit, I could write whatever I wanted to the boot sector. Secure boot will prevent that modified boot sector from booting.

              “More security is a bad thing” is a weird take